Abstract

The rodent protoparvovirus H-1PV, with its oncolytic and oncosuppressive properties, is a promising anticancer agent currently under testing in clinical trials. This explains the current demand for a scalable, good manufacturing practice-compatible virus purification process yielding high-grade pure infectious particles and overcoming the limitations of the current system based on density gradient centrifugation. We describe here a scalable process offering high purity and recovery. Taking advantage of the isoelectric point difference between full and empty particles, it eliminates most empty particles. Full particles have a significantly higher cationic charge than empty ones, with an isoelectric point of 5.8–6.2 versus 6.3 (as determined by isoelectric focusing and chromatofocusing). Thanks to this difference, infectious full particles can be separated from empty particles and most protein impurities by Convective interaction media® diethylaminoethyl (DEAE) anion exchange chromatography: applying unpurified H-1PV to the column in 0.15 M NaCl leaves, the former on the column and the latter in the flow through. The full particles are then recovered by elution with 0.25 M NaCl. The whole large-scale purification process involves filtration, single-step DEAE anion exchange chromatography, buffer exchange by cross-flow filtration, and final formulation in Visipaque/Ringer solution. It results in 98% contaminating protein removal and 96% empty particle elimination. The final infectious particle concentration reaches 3.5E10 plaque forming units (PFU)/ml, with a specific activity of 6.8E11 PFU/mg protein. Overall recovery is over 40%. The newly established method is suitable for use in commercial production.

Highlights

  • Parvovirus H-1 (H-1PV) belongs to the family Parvoviridae (Cotmore et al 2014)

  • In order to separate empty from full H-1PV wt viral particles, it was necessary to find an exploitable difference in their physical properties

  • By this procedure (Fig. 2a), chromatofocusing identified a pI of 6.3 for empty particles (PP-to-genome-containing particles (GP) ratio ~869; data not shown) and of 5.8–6.1 for full particles (PP-to-GP ratio ~1; data not shown), confirming the results obtained by isoelectric focusing

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Summary

Introduction

Parvovirus H-1 (H-1PV) belongs to the family Parvoviridae (Cotmore et al 2014). It consists of a non-enveloped icosahedral capsid 25 nm in diameter, containing a linear ~5 kb single-stranded DNA genome. VP3 (63 kDa), another capsid protein, results from posttranslational cleavage of VP2, which takes place only in full particles (Faisst et al 1995; Halder et al 2012; Hanson and Rhode 1991). As a result of promising preclinical studies, the first in-man phase I/IIa clinical trial of H-1PV was conducted in 2011–2015 in patients with recurrent glioblastoma (Geletneky et al 2012). A second phase I/II clinical trial has been initiated in patients with inoperable metastatic pancreatic cancer (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02653313; manuscript in preparation)

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